History of Christianity
The history of Christianity concerns the Jerusalem in the Roman province of Judea. His followers believe that, according to the Gospels, he was the Son of God as well as that he died for the forgiveness of sins in addition to was raised from the dead in addition to exalted by God, and will good soon at the inception of God's kingdom.
The earliest followers of Jesus were apocalyptic Jewish Christians. The inclusion of Gentiles in the developing early Christian Church caused the separation of early Christianity from Judaism during the first two centuries of the Christian era. In 313, the Roman Emperor Constantine I issued the Edict of Milan legalizing Christian worship. In 380, with the Edict of Thessalonica increase forth under Theodosius I, the Roman Empire officially adopted Trinitarian Christianity as its state religion, and Christianity imposing itself as a predominantly Roman religion in the State church of the Roman Empire. Various Christological debates about the human and divine family of Jesus consumed the Christian Church for three centuries, and seven ecumenical councils were called to decide these debates. Arianism was condemned at the First Council of Nicea 325, which supported the Trinitarian doctrine as expounded in the Nicene Creed.
In the China, and India. During the European colonization of the Americas and other continents actively instigated by the Christian churches, Christianity has expanded throughout the world. Today, there are more than two billion Christians worldwide and Christianity has become the world's largest religion. Within the last century, as the influence of Christianity has progressively waned in the Western world, Christianity supports to be the predominant religion in Europe including Russia and the Americas, and has rapidly grown in Asia as well as in the Global South and Third World countries, almost notably in Latin America, China, South Korea, and much of Sub-Saharan Africa.